"This web site is a survey of the natural area within a 25 mile radius around Cortland, New York, USA. Every species you see on this site has been found within the 25 mile limit shown here. It is bounded by Syracuse to the north, Ithaca to the west and Binghamton to the south. My intention in creating this site was to reveal the abundance and diversity of life, the hidden beauty that exists in such a relatively small geographic area."

The Digital Librarian's collection of links for Central NY, "with an emphasis on Cortland and the surrounding area." This link takes you to the section on gardens, but the DL's collection ranges over a wide variety of topics.

Your portal to gardening information at Cornell. This is the place to go for garden information specific to NY state. All sorts of fact sheets, pest information, master gardener program, invasive plants--too much to list.

" landscapes are often environmentally insensitive in a variety of different ways. They generally require more maintenance, chemical fertilizers and pesticides, and supplemental irrigation to achieve the desired aesthetic effect. These practices can contribute to a number of current environmental problems, from air and water pollution to consumption of fossil fuels. . . . By utilizing local plant species and arranging them in ways which imitate local ecological communities, natural landscapes usually require less maintenance and are substantially more environmentally sensitive." This webpage gives an introduction to creating a more environmentally sensitive landscape.

Culture information provided below is the result of trial and error and best guess practices derived from assimilating the mass of instructions geared toward Southern growing, and applying years of practical Northern gardening experience.

"The NY Natural Heritage Program enables and enhances conservation of the state's biodiversity by delivering high-quality information from field inventories, expert interpretation, and the most comprehensive database on New York's distinctive biodiversity. The following conservation guides are designed to help land managers, decision-makers, planners, scientists, consultants, and the interested public better understand the rare species and natural communities that characterize New York." They have plant, animal, and community guides.

Invite pollinators to your neighborhood by planting a pollinator friendly habitat in your garden, farm, school, park or just about anywhere! Our ecoregional planting guides are tailored to specific areas of the U.S.
You can find out which ecoregion you live in by entering your zip code
These guides were funded by the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, the C.S. Fund, the Plant Conservation Alliance, the U.S. Forest Service, and the Bureau of Land Management with oversight by the Pollinator Partnership, in support of the North American Pollinator Protection Campaign.

Syracuse Rose Society meets the second Thursday of every month (except December and February) at the Reformed Church on Teall Avenue two blocks south of James St. The well-lighted parking lot is entered from Melrose Avenue. The public is always welcome, and meetings begin at 7:30 p.m. (Founders’ Day Dinner in January begins an hour early.) There is also good information about rose culture in upstate NY on the website.

Syracuse-based horticulturalist and landscape designer Terry Ettinger offers information on a variety of topics: lawn care, pernicious weeds, lilacs, overgrown evergreens and more. His home page focuses on a featured plant and a question of the week.